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An iOS Developer's Guide to SwiftUI

You're reading from   An iOS Developer's Guide to SwiftUI Design and build beautiful apps quickly and easily with minimum code

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801813624
Length 446 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Michele Fadda Michele Fadda
Author Profile Icon Michele Fadda
Michele Fadda
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Table of Contents (25) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Simple Views FREE CHAPTER
2. Chapter 1: Exploring the Environment – Xcode, Playgrounds, and SwiftUI 3. Chapter 2: Adding Basic UI Elements and Designing Layouts 4. Chapter 3: Adding Interactivity to a SwiftUI View 5. Part 2: Scrollable Views
6. Chapter 4: Iterating Views, Scroll Views, FocusState, Lists, and Scroll View Reader 7. Chapter 5: The Art of Displaying Grids 8. Part 3: SwiftUI Navigation
9. Chapter 6: Tab Bars and Modal View Presentation 10. Chapter 7: All About Navigation 11. Part 4: Graphics and Animation
12. Chapter 8: Creating Custom Graphics 13. Chapter 9: An Introduction to Animations in SwiftUI 14. Part 5: App Architecture
15. Chapter 10: App Architecture and SwiftUI Part I: Practical Tools 16. Chapter 11: App Architecture and SwiftUI Part II – the Theory 17. Part 6: Beyond Basics
18. Chapter 12: Persistence with Core Data 19. Chapter 13: Modern Structured Concurrency 20. Chapter 14: An Introduction to SwiftData 21. Chapter 15: Consuming REST Services in SwiftUI 22. Chapter 16: Exploring the Apple Vision Pro 23. Index 24. Other Books You May Enjoy

Using the async/await syntax

The async/await syntax is the backbone of this structured concurrency. Let’s begin by understanding the async keyword.

async in Swift means that a function will perform some asynchronous operation, suspending the thread till the operation completes, and returning only when that operation is complete. Unlike a standard function, a function marked with the async keyword doesn’t block the caller but, rather, allows it to continue executing other tasks.

This is useful to perform IO-bound tasks, computationally intensive calculations, networking calls, and file operations, as it won’t stop the CPU while waiting – for instance, while waiting for data from a network operation.

An example of a Swift async function, illustrating the async syntax, is the following example code fragment:

// an example async function
import Foundation
func fetchData() async -> Data {
    // perform a network call
 ...
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